Toward clinical evaluation of rapamycin to target biological aging Matt Kaeberlein, PhD Professor, Director, Healthy Aging & Longevity Research Institute Director, Nathan Shock Center of Excellence in The Basic Biology of Aging Director, Biological Mechanisms of Healthy Aging Training Program Co-Director, Dog Aging Project Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathology University of WashingtonWhy Attend this Seminar? The mTOR inhibitor rapamycin is the most robust and reproducible pharmacological intervention to increase lifespan and healthspan metrics in laboratory animals. Several groups have independently shown that short-term treatment with rapamycin during middle-age in mice can prevent age-related decline or rejuvenate functional measures of health in various organs and tissues including brain, heart, kidney, muscle, oral cavity, immune system, and ovary. Here I will summarize the preclinical evidence that rapamycin can positively modulate biological aging and describe current efforts to determine whether these effects are shared in companion dogs and people. Meeting ID: 930 4620 8772 Passcode: PATH520 |